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Stephen William Hawking
1942 -

The
theories of British physicist and mathematician Stephen William
Hawking (born 1942) placed him in the great tradition of Newton
and Einstein. Hawking made fundamental contributions to the
science of cosmology - the study of the origins, structure, and
space-time relationships of the universe.
Stephen W. Hawking was born on January 8, 1942, in Oxford,
England. His father, a well-known researcher in tropical
medicine, urged his son to seek a career in the sciences.
Stephen found biology and medicine too descriptive and lacking
in exactness. Therefore, he turned to the study of mathematics
and physics.
Hawking was not an outstanding student at St. Alban's School,
Hertfordshire, nor later at Oxford University, which he entered
in 1959. He was a sociable young man who did little schoolwork
because he was able to grasp the essentials of a mathematics or
physics problem quickly and intuitively. While at Oxford he
became increasingly interested in relativity theory and quantum
mechanics, eventually graduating with a first class honors in
physics (1962). He immediately began post-graduate studies at
Cambridge University.
The onset of Hawking's graduate education at Cambridge marked a
turning point in his life. It was then that he embarked upon the
formal study of cosmology that focused his intellectual energies
in a way that they had never been previously. And it was then
that he was first stricken with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
(Lou Gehrig's disease), a debilitating neuromotor disease that
eventually led to his total confinement to a wheelchair and to a
virtual loss of his speech functions. At Cambridge his talents
were recognized by his major professor, the cosmologist Dennis
W. Sciama, and he was encouraged to carry on his studies despite
his growing physical disabilities. His marriage in 1965 to Jane
Wilde was an important step in his emotional life. Marriage gave
him, he recalled, the determination to live and make
professional progress in the world of science. Hawking received
his doctorate degree in 1966 and began his life-long research
and teaching association with Cambridge University.
Hawking made his first major contribution to science with his
theorem of singularity, a work which grew out of his
collaboration with theoretician Roger Penrose. A singularity is
a place in either space or time at which some quantity becomes
infinite. Such a place is found in a black hole, the final stage
of a collapsed star, where the gravitational field has infinite
strength. Penrose proved that a singularity was not a
hypothetical construct; it could exist in the space-time of a
real universe.
Drawing upon Penrose's work and on Einstein's General Theory of
Relativity, Hawking demonstrated that our universe had its
origins in a singularity. In the beginning all of the matter in
the universe was concentrated in a single point, making a very
small but tremendously dense body. Ten to twenty billion years
ago that body exploded in a big bang which initiated time and
the universe. Hawking was able to bring current astrophysical
research to support the big bang theory of the origin of the
universe and refute the rival steady-state theory.
Hawking's research into the cosmological implications of
singularities led him to study the properties of the bestknown
singularity: the black hole. Although a black hole is a
discontinuity in space-time, its boundary, called the event
horizon, can be detected. Hawking proved that the surface area
of the event horizon of a black hole could only increase, not
decrease, and that when two black holes merged the surface area
of the new hole was larger than the sum of the two original
surface areas. Working in concert with B. Carter, W. Israel, and
D. Robinson, Hawking was also able to prove the "No Hair
Theorem" first proposed by physicist John Wheeler. According to
this theorem, mass, angular momentum, and electric charge were
the sole properties conserved when matter entered a black hole.
Hawking's continuing examination of the nature of black holes
led to two important discoveries. The first of them, that black
holes can emit thermal radiation, was contrary to the claim that
nothing could escape from a black hole. The second concerned the
size of black holes. As originally conceived, black holes were
immense in size because they were the end result of the collapse
of gigantic stars. Using quantum mechanics to study particle
interaction at the subatomic level, Hawking postulated the
existence of millions of mini-black holes. These were formed by
the force of the original big bang explosion.
Hawking summarized his scientific interests as "gravity - on all
scales, " from the realm of galaxies at one extreme to the
subatomic at the other extreme. In the 1980s Hawking worked on a
theory that Einstein unsuccessfully searched for in his later
years. This is the famous unified field theory that aims to
bring together quantum mechanics and relativity in a quantum
theory of gravity. A complete unified theory encompasses the
four main interactions known to modern physics: the strong
nuclear force, which operates at the subatomic level;
electromagnetism; the weak nuclear force of radioactivity; and
gravity. The unified theory would account for the conditions
which prevailed at the origin of the universe as well as for the
existing physical laws of nature. When humans develop the
unified field theory, said Hawking, they will "know the mind of
God."
As his physical condition grew worse Hawking's intellectual
achievements increased. Not content with causing a revolution in
cosmology, he presented a popular exposition of his ideas in A
Brief History of Time: From the Big Bang to Black Holes. First
published in 1988, this book acquired great popularity in the
United States. It sold over a million copies and was listed as
the best-selling nonfiction book for over a year.
In 1993 Hawking wrote Black Holes and Baby Universes and Other
Essays, which, in addition to a discussion of whether elementary
particles that fall into black holes can form new, "baby"
universes separate from our own, contains chapters about
Hawking's personal life. He co-authored a book in 1996 with Sir
Roger Penrose titled The Nature of Space and Time, which is
based on a series of lectures and a final debate by the two
authors. Issues discussed in this book include whether the
universe has boundaries and if it will continue to expand
forever. Hawking says yes to the first question and no to the
second, while Penrose argues the opposite. Hawking joined
Penrose again the following year, as well as Abner Shimony and
Nancy Cartwright, in the creation of another book, The Large,
the Small, and the Human Mind (1997). In this collection of
talks given as Cambridge's 1995 Tanner Lectures on Human Values,
Hawking and the others respond to Penrose's thesis on general
relativity, quantam physics, and artificial intelligence.
Hawking's work in modern cosmology and in theoretical astronomy
and physics was widely recognized. He became a fellow of the
Royal Society of London in 1974 and five years later was named
to a professorial chair once held by Sir Isaac Newton: Lucasian
professor of mathematics, Cambridge University. Beyond these
honors he earned a host of honorary degrees, awards, prizes, and
lectureships from the major universities and scientific
societies of Europe and America. These included the Eddington
Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society, in 1975; the Pius XI
Gold Medal, in 1975; the Maxwell Medal of the Institute of
Physics, in 1976; the Albert Einstein Award of the Lewis and
Rose Strauss Memorial Fund (the most prestigious award in
theoretical physics), in 1978; the Franklin Medal of the
Franklin Institute, in 1981; the Gold Medal of the Royal
Society, in 1985; the Paul Dirac Medal and Prize, in 1987; and
the Britannica Award, in 1989. By the last decade of the 20th
century Stephen Hawking had become one of the best-known
scientists in the world.
Hawking's endeavors include endorsing a wireless connection to
the internet produced by U.S. Robotics Inc., beginning in March
1997, and speaking to wheelchair-bound youth. In addition,
Hawking made an appearance on the television series Star Trek
that his fans will not soon forget.
Hawking does not readily discuss his personal life, but it is
generally know that he was divorced from his first wife in 1991
and they have two sons and a daughter.
When asked about his objectives, Hawking told Robert Deltete of
Zygon in a 1995 interview, "My goal is a complete understanding
of the universe, why it is as it is and why it exists at all."
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This web page was last updated on:
09 March, 2009
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